A rationibus

The a rationibus was the secretary of finance in the Roman Empire and in charge of the imperial treasury, the fiscus. His responsibilities involved monitoring the state's revenues and expenditures and maintaining the accounts of the fiscus, giving the a rationibus considerable influence.[1]

The role of the a rationibus was originally created by Augustus, who needed accurate and comprehensive accounts of the general finances of the state in order to exercise budgetary control, and given to members of his household, probably freedmen. Under Tiberius, the role was institutionalized through the position of the a rationibus, who was paid a salary by the aerarium and given an office in the Palatine bureaus.[2] Roman patrician families such as the Junii Silani may also have designated their accountants as "a rationibus", although this custom fell out of practice when the imperial office of the a rationibus became institutionalized and vanished under Nero at the latest.[3] Within his role as accountant, the careful bookkeeping of military expenditures, the costs of the public distribution of grain, religious constructions and infrastructure projects, but also the embellishment of the imperial palace, and project public revenues, e.g. from the Empire's various mines, were among his most important tasks.[4] Moreover, the a rationibus was responsible for the behavior of the magistrates of the fiscus and complaints were addressed at his office.[5] The praepositus a rationibus was helped by his chief subordinate, the proximus a rationibus, and strongly relied on the continuous confidence of the emperor, as evidenced by the consequences of Tiberius Iul. Aug. lib.'s dismissal.[6] Sometimes, the offices of the a rationibus and ab epistulis, the secretary in charge of the imperial correspondence, were joined, e.g. in the case of Tiberius Claudius Vibianus Tertullus.[7]

The office of a rationibus was initially held by freedmen[8] such as Pallas, Phaon, and the father of Claudius Etruscus. However, from the 2nd century AD on (i.e., around the reigns of Trajan and Hadrian), the position was occupied only by Equestrians (Equites) after the reputation of freedmen had been blackened due to their undue influence at the imperial court and several corruption affairs. The office of the a rationibus was abolished through Diocletian's tetrarchic reforms, which put the management of the imperial finances during the 4th and 5th century AD under the purview of the comes sacrarum largitionum (master of the sacred largess).

References

  1. Jones, A.H.M. (1950). The Aerarium and the Fiscus. The Journal of Roman Studies, 40 (Parts 1 and 2), pp. 20-29.
  2. Weaver, P.R.C. (1967). Social Mobility in the Early Roman Empire: The Evidence of the Imperial Freedmen and Slaves. Past & Present, 37, pp. 3-20.
  3. Brunt, P.A. (1966). The 'Fiscus' and Its Development. The Journal of Roman Studies, 56 (Parts 1 and 2), pp. 75-91.
  4. Brunt, P.A. (1966). The 'Fiscus' and Its Development. The Journal of Roman Studies, 56 (Parts 1 and 2), pp. 75-91.
  5. One example for this is the complaint about maltreatment by imperial magistrates written to the a rationibus' by the contractors of the Imperial sheep flocks in the Abruzzi '; cf. Corbier, M. (1983). Fiscus and Patrimonium: The Saepinum Inscription and Transhumance in the Abruzzi. The Journal of Roman Studies, 73, pp. 126-131.
  6. Evans, J.K. (1978). The Role of suffragium in Imperial Political Decision-Making: A Flavian Example. Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 27(1), pp. 102-128.
  7. Townend, G.B. (1961). The Post of Ab Epistulis in the Second Century. Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 10(3), pp. 375-381.
  8. Weaver, P.R.C. (1965). Freedmen Procurators in the Imperial Administration. Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 14(4), pp. 460-469.

See also

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